An introduction to the diversity of animal life Peter Shaw RU This is the jpg-free version to save space.

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An introduction to the diversity of animal life Peter Shaw RU This is the jpg-free version to save space

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Aim for today To introduce you to the range of animal life on the planet. In one lecture I can do no more than scrape the surface, but want to give you a basic structure to carry in your head into which any animal may be fitted. Forgive me for throwing a lot at you in one lecture! This framework has a hierarchical structure (meaning it can be shown as a dendrogram) founded in taxonomy. Dendrogram Taxonomy – the study of the classification of life forms.

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Taxonomic hierarchies These are about seeking common features unifying all the organisms in a named group. The deepest split of all is between two ways of organising cells – the eukaryotic cell (with a nucleus and organelles) and prokaryotic cells (with DNA loops floating free in the cytoplasm). These are divided into 5 kingdoms in modern systems: Prokaryotes Eubacteria Archaebacteria (Viruses would count as a 6th, if you regard them as alive). Eukaryotes: Animals Plants Fungi

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Phyla In this course we will concentrate on just one kingdom, the animals. Luckily there are few hidden catches here – it is usually pretty obvious if a life form is an animal or not, though at the single celled level things can get rather blurred. (Volvox is a single celled green, photosynthetic entity which can ingest particulate food. It has good claims to be both animal and plant). The next level down from kingdom is the one that REALLY matters for classifying animals. It is called Phylum, plural phyla. (NOT fila, as a student once wrote in a failed exam paper…) There are about 30 phyla, each with a deep underlying similarity of body form. Once you can place an animal in its phylum you have made an excellent start towards understanding its anatomy.

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The full hierarchy Kingdom - animalia Phylum - mandibulata Class - Insecta Order - Collembola Family - Entomobryidae Genus Entomobrya Species Entomobrya nivalis Species - the basis of taxonomy, dignified by a Latinised binomial = the scientific name: Homo sapiens, Apodemus sylvaticus, Lumbricus terrestris. (I dislike the term “latin name”, since it is not Latin but merely latinised. Others find it acceptable, but I would encourage ‘Scientific name’)

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How to write a scientific name! So many students get this wrong that I want to tell you now, at the start of your careers, how to write these names. Remember that getting it wrong is equivalent to saying “I have not been formally trained in biology”. Homo sapiens ORHomo sapiens When writing by hand underline the name. 1 st name has a capital letter, 2 nd does not On a PC make the font italic

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One cell or many? We start dividing up animals here. Some animals have just one cell – many others have large numbers of differentiated cells. 1 cell - ProtozoaMany cells – parazoa and metazoa

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The Protozoa – the single celled animals In fact many of these are photosynthetic and are claimed as plants by botanists, while some are both photosynthetic and carnivorous! The animal -plant - fungus split does not make sense at this level. Old system: exclude green species, lump the rest in Phylum protozoa, which has 4 classes: ciliates (Paramecium caudatum) – many small cilia flagellates (Euglena, Trypanosoma) – one big cilium (flagellum) Rhizopoda (Amoeba proteus) – no cilia + a less well known class of parasitic species: Sporozoa (Plasmodium vivax)

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New version – kingdom Protozoa Instead of the drastic shoe-horning described above, the current version is to regard all single-celled organisms as belonging to the kingdom Protozoa with many phyla (27 at last count!) This is probably more realistic, but much harder to remember.

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Sponges – Phylum parazoa These are essentially colonial protozoa, whose colonies are reinforced with solid spicules of various shapes and composition. Silica SiO 2 and Calcite CaCO 3 are the commonest.

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Parazoa are exclusively aquatic, mainly marine, and live by filter feeding. The feeding cells are called choanocytes, which incorporate a central flagellum pumping water through the sponge, and the water passes through a collar of cilia-like filtering projections. The other main cell type is ameoba-like, making the supporting tissues and moving nutrients around. Typically sponges suck water in from around their bodies and exhale it from a common central siphon. Due to their diffuse form, and often variable colour, identifying them is often difficult / impossible in the field and relies on microscopic examination of spicules.

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The next level up in organisation takes us to the group of animals that used to be classed as phylum coelenterata (jellyfish, anemones and sea gooseberries). These are now split into 2 phyla, based on deep differences in design of their their stinging cells: Cnidaria – jellyfish and anemones Ctenophora – sea gooseberries. 1 cell - Protozoa No clear tissues: parazoa Metazoa: These are animals with fully differentiated tissues, including muscles and nerves. Tissues: metazoa Many cells

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This phylum feeds by capturing planktonic food using tentacles armed with a cnidarian speciality, the class of stinging cell called nematocysts. Some are entangling, some inject barbed points to anchor, some inject toxins. A few a lethal to humans - NEVER EVER swim with box jellies (sea wasps, class Cubomedusae). A cnidocyte (=nematocyst)

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Phylum Platyhelminths The simplest of these phyla are the flatworms, platyhelminths. These have no body cavity (acoelomate), and a “bottle gut” (ie mouth and anus are the same orifice). A few are internal parasites, ie liver fluke Fasciola hepatica. Bilharzia is caused by a flatworm Schistosoma that lives inside blood vessels - a serious medical problem. <1mm deep Combined mouth and anus, leading into gut Many are free living, the planaria, and are active hunters. One recently introduced species from New Zealand is a serious earthworm predator - Arthiopostioa triangulata. M+F Schistosoma

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Body cavities None of the phyla mentioned so far have any internal fluid-filled body cavities. In fact most animal phyla do – these turn out to be highly important for making sense of phyla. Bilateral symmetry 3 cell layers in embryo No body cavity Flatworms Phylum platyhelminths (and the closely related phylum nemertini, bootlace worms.) Has body cavity Lined with cells Coelomate phyla Not lined with cells Pseudocoelomate phyla

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Pseudocoelomates, especially phylum nematoda, the roundworms There are quite a few rather obscure phyla here, mainly of tiny (<2mm) and unfamiliar creatures that live in the water between grains of sand, in sediments etc – Phyla rotifera, gastrotricha and others (look up “minor pseudocoelomate phyla”). There is only one of these phyla that is really significant in terms of species richness. These are the roundworms, phylum nematoda.

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Nematodes: Almost all have the same body shape - round, pointy at both ends. (A very few plant parasitic species look like balloons, being immobile and full of eggs). All have a thick collagen body wall retaining a high internal hydrostatic pressure - they are almost impossible to squash under normal circumstances. Most of you here will have been infected with nematodes. Luckily the commonest nematode in humans is tiny and harmless - the pinworm Enterobius vermicularis. Nematode eggs are very tough (collagen wall again) and stay viable for months or years. Phylum nematoda – the roundworms

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The big 5 coelomate phyla There are about 10 phyla in which the basic body design involves a body cavity lined with cells (called a coelom), but of these I will only cover 4 today – these are the important common ones. One grouping is probably 3 distantly related phyla. Phylum annelida – the segmented worms Phylum mollusca : snails and allies Phylum echinodermata – starfish and allies Phylum (superphylum?) arthropoda – insects, spiders and crustaceans. Phylum chordata – everything with a backbone (including us)

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Phylum Annelida – the segmented worms. The most familiar of these is the common earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris. (In fact, ecologically, this is one of the oddest annelids!) All have true metameric segmentation, with each segment carrying gut, musculature and part of the nerve cord. There is often some differentiation of segments, ie the collar (clitellum) of earthworms. Lumbricid showing clitellum

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Phylum Mollusca – snails and allies These have a soft, mucus-covered body with a muscular foot, often with a calcareous shell. Class Lamellibranchs (=Bivalves) - aquatic filter feeders, using their gills to capture suspended food particles.

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Class Cephalopoda - octopuses, squids, ammonites, nautilus (ie common octopus; Octopus vulgaris). Very different to other molluscs, with the muscular foot becoming 8-10 tentacles for food capture. They have independently evolved an eye almost identical to vertebrates, and seem to be the most highly intelligent invertebrates. They also include the largest invertebrates - a giant squid can be >5m long, with another 10m of tentacles. Phylum Mollusca – snails and allies

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phylum Arthropoda – insects, spiders and crustaceans This is the biggest phylum in existence. All these animals have a hard external skeleton and jointed legs. (‘Arthropod’ means jointed foot or limb). For many years these were treated as one huge phylum with three clear subphyla. More recently various lines of work, notably DNA analyses, suggest that the differences in these 3 subphyla are so great that they probably evolved the ‘armoured’ body form independently, and should be seen as 3 distinct phyla. Note that there is continuing disagreement about whether arthropods are a phylum or a super-phylum. The recent merge with nematodes into ecdysozoa strengthens the case for ‘phylum’.

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Our phylum – the chordates All chordates have a dorsal nerve cord running along the body. There is an anterior swelling (‘brain’), and segmentalised body with segmented blocks of muscle. Unlike the arthropods and molluscs the brain does not encircle the gut – happens to be a good design for large body sizes. Most chordates have bones along their nerve cord, making them vertebrates. Not all – some of our phylum are invertebrates! A hagfish – a boneless chordate, here tying A knot in itself.

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Sea squirts (subphylum urochordates) have a larval form that is built much like a tadpole, barring a lack of bone, and are clearly from the chordate mould. But the adults forsake this for a sedentary life filtering sea water through a mucus net. There are a few other less well known invertebrate chordates. Our phylum – the chordates Adult sea squirt – Ciona intestinalis Larval tunicate, showing same notochord anatomy as mouse